With the default kernel and thus with the build I have tested in
74ec94bfa2, we get an error during
modules_install:
make[2]: execvp: /nix/store/.../bin/bash: Argument list too long
I haven't noticed this build until I actually tried booting using this
kernel because make didn't fail here.
The reason this happens within Nix and probably didn't yet surface in
other distros is that programs only have a limited amount of memory
available for storing the environment and the arguments.
Environment variables however are quite common on Nix and thus we
stumble on problems like this way earlier - in this case Linux 4.8 - but
I have noticed this in 4.7-next as well already.
The fix is far from perfect and suffers performance overhead because we
now run grep for every *.mod file instead of passing all *.mod files
into one single invocation of grep.
But comparing the performance overhead (around 1s on my machine) with
the overall build time of the kernel I think the overhead really is
neglicible.
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Tested by only building the linux_testing attribute, but haven't yet
tested it in production.
I've also fixed the extraMeta.branch attribute.
Verified-with-PGP: ABAF 11C6 5A29 70B1 30AB E3C4 79BE 3E43 0041 1886
Signed-off-by: aszlig <aszlig@redmoonstudios.org>
Previously, features.grsecurity wasn't actually set due to a bug in the
grsec builder. We now rely on the generic kernel builder to set features
from kernelPatches.
Upstream
e71a5fc58c
adds linux 4.7 support; all subsequent commits are error fixes so we
bump to current HEAD for good measure.
Built against linux and linux_latest.
Mark as broken on -grsec, seems incompatible with PaX
constification:
> 76fb2-src/hal/rtl8723b_hal_init.c:2186:26: error: assignment of member
'free_hal_data' in read-only object
pHalFunc->free_hal_data = &rtl8723b_free_hal_data;
and so on.
List of what to enable taken from https://lwn.net/Articles/672587/.
This doesn't change the resulting x86 configs, but is more useful for
other architectures. For instance, POSIX_MQUEUE is currently missing
on ARM.
glibc 2.24 deprecated readdir_r, breaking the perf build:
$ nix-build -A linuxPackages.perf
...
CC util/event.o
CC util/evlist.o
util/event.c: In function '__event__synthesize_thread':
util/event.c:448:2: error: 'readdir_r' is deprecated [-Werror=deprecated-declarations]
while (!readdir_r(tasks, &dirent, &next) && next) {
^
In file included from /nix/store/8ic0jwg3p5vcwx52k4781n987hmv0bks-glibc-2.24-dev/include/features.h:368:0,
from /nix/store/8ic0jwg3p5vcwx52k4781n987hmv0bks-glibc-2.24-dev/include/stdint.h:25,
from /nix/store/jsazxc1b86g2ww569ziwhhvkz8z43vjd-gcc-5.4.0/lib/gcc/x86_64-unknown-linux-gnu/5.4.0/include/stdint.h:9,
from /tmp/nix-build-perf-linux-4.4.19.drv-0/linux-4.4.19/tools/include/linux/types.h:6,
from util/event.c:1:
/nix/store/8ic0jwg3p5vcwx52k4781n987hmv0bks-glibc-2.24-dev/include/dirent.h:189:12: note: declared here
extern int __REDIRECT (readdir_r,
^
util/event.c: In function 'perf_event__synthesize_threads':
util/event.c:586:2: error: 'readdir_r' is deprecated [-Werror=deprecated-declarations]
while (!readdir_r(proc, &dirent, &next) && next) {
Fix by adding -Wno-error=deprecated-declarations compile flag.
Revert a revert of a merge that shouldn't have been in master but was intentionally in staging.
Next time I'll do this right after the revert instead of so far down the line...
This reverts commit 9adad8612b.
See #11567.
Furthermore, it renames pythonPackages.dbus to pythonPackages.dbus-
python as that's the name upstream uses.
There is a small rebuild but I couldn't figure out the actual cause.
Until we've made sure that most things actually work out of the box, we
need to give people a way of continuing to use the system without
completely disabling grsecurity.
Set sysctl kernel.pax.softmode=1 or boot with pax.softmode=1
This currently only produces a static library, but is a start :) soon we
might be able to incorporate it into our stdenv, but we need to get the
build system to produce a proper .framework first.
We don't actually need the private headers and the private qos.h was
overwriting the public one, causing weird issues downstream (especially
with Swift's CoreFoundation)
I can't submit this in smaller units because the various components all
depend on one another during the stdenv bootstrap, so I think this is
the smallest sensible change I can make.
I also removed the symbol-hiding shenanigans in Libsystem. It might mess
up compatibility with 10.9 but I don't really want to support the added
complexity and I see little evidence of anyone else wanting to support
it. If someone cares, we might be able to revive compatibility, but for
now it'll stay like this.